Responsibility outsourced: social audits, workplace certification and twenty years of failure to protect worker rights
American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, Washington, DC
AFL-CIO - Washington, DC
2013
60 p.
case study ; corporate social responsibility ; freedom of association ; globalization ; labour standard ; occupational safety and health ; trade union document ; workers rights
China ; Guatemala ; Honduras ; India ; Indonesia ; Pakistan ; Philippines
Business economics
English
Bibliogr.
"Since at least the 1980s, global supply chains of major brands have spread to countries where governments have demonstrated little will or capacity to regulate the many workplaces that enter into business relationships with these brands. In such places, labor laws often are weak or poorly enforced, workers' rights are not recognized and workers effectively are blocked from organizing unions and engaging in collective bargaining with employers to bring wages above poverty level. Basic safety and health standards and human rights at many of these workplaces routinely are violated. Locating production in these most precarious parts of the global supply chain has become a standard means for international brands to maximize revenues and press for an edge on their competitors by driving production costs ever lower.
This report ( English , Español ) digs underneath the façade of social auditing and certification schemes to reveal a deeply disturbing abdication of responsibilities on the part of both governments to protect human rights at the workplace and of companies to respect these rights by exercising due diligence regarding the impact of their business activities and their business relationships."
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